Live Nation to open Ticketmaster to other sellers and pay $280 ...
Live Nation, the parent company of Ticketmaster, has reached a deal with the Department of Justice as part of a high-stakes antitrust trial.
www.cbsnews.comThe biggest recent Ticketmaster news is that Live Nation reached a tentative antitrust settlement with the U.S. Justice Department in March 2026, avoiding an immediate forced breakup while agreeing to major changes to how Ticketmaster operates.[2][3]
Live Nation agreed to pay $280 million in civil penalties to 40 states that sued over antitrust concerns, and Ticketmaster must open parts of its technology to rival ticket sellers. The settlement also includes divesting 13 amphitheaters, with the possibility of more depending on state participation.[2]
The deal is designed to increase competition in primary ticketing and reduce pressure on ticket fees and checkout transparency. Under the reported terms, amphitheater service fees would be capped at 15%, and venues could choose non-exclusive arrangements instead of being locked into Ticketmaster.[2]
In late March 2026, reporting also said Ticketmaster had adjusted other fees after the FTC’s all-in pricing rules took effect, effectively shifting costs rather than eliminating them. That story came alongside broader scrutiny of Live Nation and Ticketmaster over pricing, resale practices, and market power.[4][7]
So the current Ticketmaster story is less about a single product update and more about regulatory pressure, antitrust settlement terms, and fee changes that could affect both venues and concertgoers. The settlement still needed final court approval at the time of reporting.[3][6][4][2]
Would you like a concise timeline of the major Ticketmaster developments from the past year?
Live Nation, the parent company of Ticketmaster, has reached a deal with the Department of Justice as part of a high-stakes antitrust trial.
www.cbsnews.comThe agreement, which requires a judicial sign-off, would avoid a breakup of the concert giant. But states who joined the suit object to the terms.
www.nytimes.comShares of Ticketmaster parent Live Nation rallied toward their biggest gain in nearly a year, as analysts don't see the settlement as helping competition to gain traction.
www.marketwatch.comThe Federal Trade Commission and seven states sued Live Nation and Ticketmaster for tacitly coordinating with brokers and allowing them to harvest millions of dollars worth of tickets in the primar
www.ftc.govThe company said it was abiding by rules introduced in 2025
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